The Amiga Games Database

Welcome to the Amiga Games Database. It's purpose is to provide Amiga
games players with an informed but subjective opinion on a wide range of
games. A vast amount of Amiga titles have been written, some of them more than a
decade ago. We've all come across some awful software in our time, but for
many of us, there's a surprising quantity of undiscovered classic Amiga
games out there. The AGDB is here to help you identify them. It is
not here to help you find pirated
games so please don't ask. If you have any queries
about Amiga games please click on the question
link.

AGDB News
I am still hopeful of including screenshots with the reviews, but when I
have sorted out the system for this, I'm going to need some help!
Currently I'm in the process of getting advice from a knowledgable friend
on how to produce efficient and high quality screenshots. When I have got
up to speed with this I should be able to make some progress.

Please keep the reviews coming, there are still many games that are not
reviewed and plenty that deserve a futher review.... am I the only person
that played Carrier Command, and how about Heimdall?

AGDB Help Request:
As ever new reviews are required, so please try and contribute one if you
possibly can. Any reviews (apart from those on the Overkill list) are welcome. Two games I would
really like reviewed are Shuttle (The highly detailed Space simulation
from 3D specialists Vektor Grafiks) and Debut, a truly weird game,
apparently written by a pair of hippies called Tym and Phyd with a taste
for Pink Floyd. The game combined an arcade adventure where you found and
dismantled nuclear reactors with a planet simulation requiring you to
fine-tune the planet's ecosystem in an attempt to save it. Can you help?

Quote of the month:
"One thing that isn't made at all clear is how the game is structured:
Exodus 3010 is a linear sequence of encounters. The Starlight is pre-programmed to
travel from A to Z and you're gonna bump into every letter along the way."

mecha-neko on Exodus 3010

If you'd like to contribute a game review yourself, and I need all the
help I can get, you might like to see the Submissions page, or just send your review to
me. In an effort to reduce the huge amounts of spam I receive, I have
"broken" my e-mail address by adding numbers to it. For the correct
address, just remove them: ang111us@ang222usm.dem333on.co.uk

You can review any Amiga game you like, commercial or PD but please avoid
the games on the Overkill list, which have
already got three reviews each. If you're really stuck for ideas you might
want to look at the Suggestions list.

and, as special guest star, my show report of the Bath Amiga Show (13-12-03)
(presented by the South West Amiga Group)

Credits
The Amiga Games Database was conceived by Angus Manwaring and Dennis
Smith, with contributions from the Amiga community, to whom it is
dedicated; past, present and future.

Thanks are also due to:

Malcolm Pryor for the Logo Design
David Braben for use of the Eagle Fighter in the logo
Sean Caszatt for permission to adapt the Amiga Entertainment reviews
Bert Jahn for WHDLoad
Jean-François Fabre for JST
The Patchers for the patches
Jason Compton for the Amiga Report reviews

Copyright etc.
The AGDB is from the Amiga community - to the Amiga community, if you want
to download, save, or print any of the reviews for your own reference,
that's what it's for. However, you may not use AGDB reviews on your web
site, or publish them in any manner. (See also the Submissions page). Linking to this page is fine.